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Smokestack Lightnin' Home Page' -- The Blues Profile Page
The Memphis Blues is a style of blues music
that was created in the 1920s and 1930s by Memphis-area
musicians like Frank Stokes, Sleepy John Estes, Furry Lewis and
Memphis Minnie. The style was popular in vaudeville and medicine
shows, and was associated with Memphis' main entertainment area,
Beale Street.
History
In addition to guitar-based blues, jug bands, such as Gus
Cannon's Jug Stompers and the Memphis Jug Band, were extremely
popular practitioners of Memphis blues. The jug band style
emphasized the danceable, syncopated rhythms of early jazz and a
range of other archaic folk styles. It was played on simple,
sometimes homemade, instruments such as harmonicas, violins,
mandolins, banjos, and guitars, backed by washboards, kazoo,
guimbarde and jugs blown to supply the bass.
After World War II, as African-Americans left the Mississippi
Delta and other impoverished areas of the south for urban areas,
many musicians gravitated to Memphis' blues scene, changing the
classic Memphis blues sound. Musicians such as Howlin' Wolf,
Willie Nix, Ike Turner, and
B.B.King performed on Beale Street
and in West Memphis, and recorded some of the classic electric
blues, rhythm and blues and rock & roll records for labels such
as Sun Records. Sam Phillips' Sun Records company recorded
musicians such as Howlin' Wolf (before he moved to Chicago),
Willie Nix, Ike Turner, and
B.B.King. These players had a strong
influence on later musicians in these styles, notably the early
rock & rollers and rockabillies, many of whom also recorded for
Sun Records. After Phillips discovered Elvis Presley in 1954,
the Sun label turned to the rapidly expanding white audience and
started recording mostly rock 'n' roll.
Memphis blues musicians
W. C. Handy
B. B. King
Frank Stokes
Junior Wells
Furry Lewis
Willie Nix
Sleepy John Estes
Ida Cox
Junior Parker
Memphis Minnie
Howlin' Wolf
Rosco Gordon
Bobby Sowell
Robert Wilkins
Doctor Ross
Joe Hill Louis
This section was created from www.wikipedia.com